After the US liberated poppies from Taliban by the US invasion in 2001, and 
after the US invaded Iraq in 2003, Richard Armitage kicked Syria out of Bekaa 
Valley, Lebanon, thereby leaving Lebanese poppy growing areas to a Shiite 
majority living there, though not necessarily to the Hezbollah organization. 
Five Weapons Company media wants to say that Hezbollah controls Lebanese heroin 
now, and will mount operations like 911 using heroin profits from smuggling 
heroin into the US. This begs us to ask, did Lebanese heroin money fund 911 
while Richard Armitage controlled Lebanese heroin smuggling into the US? Pardon 
the rhetorical question, but we are stupid people.

Writers including Daniel Hopsicker and Bernard Henri Levy give us bits and 
pieces of a picture of Saudi, Pak, and Syrian intelligence agencies attacking 
the US on 9/11/2001. If those three intelligence agenices attacked the US, that 
could only mean that the operation was planned and coordinated at CIA.

Monzer Al Kasser, Syrian intel and CIA heroin asset who planted the Lockerbie 
bomb on Pan Am 103 at Frankfurt, according to reliable DIA source Les Coleman 
and confirmed by capitol hill lobbyist William Chasey, was arrested just before 
the 2008 presidential election. His arrest, Les Coleman's arrest, and the 
arrest of Khalid Sheikh Mohamed and Amed Omar Saeed Sheikh the kidnap-murderers 
of WSJ reporter Daniel Pearl, complete the coverup of 911 funding by CIA heroin 
smuggling involving Pak, Syrian, Saudi, Egyptian, Muslim Brotherhood 
connections going back through German intel to Prescott Bush before Bush 
popularized Hitler by the first Marshall plan aka "Hitler's Economy". The same 
German intel elements who worked with Bush and Hitler, placed the Lockerbie 
bomb by Muslim Brotherhood assets with German intel Swiss fuse at Frankfurt, 
and financed 911 with Muslim Brotherood German and Bush asset Mohamed Atta 
flying CIA asset Monzer Al Kasser's Muslim Brotherhood Lebanese-Syrian heroin 
to Porter Zapruder Goss in Florida.

Nixon's Whole Bay of Pigs Thing, all the disgruntled Bay of Pigs CIA vets 
including Bush and Goss, comes out now in Red Cocaine Redux. The trouble is, 
Hezbollah did not control 911 heroin funding, CIA asset Monzer Al Kasser of CIA 
Lockerbie Pan Am 103 bombing controlled 911 heroin funding to Porter Goss and 
his home boys. A minor faux pas by those who are just bungling through:

http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/mar/27/hezbollah-uses-mexican-drug-routes-into-us/print/

Friday, March 27, 2009
EXCLUSIVE: Hezbollah uses Mexican drug routes into U.S.
Sara A. Carter, Washington Times

EXCLUSIVE:

Hezbollah is using the same southern narcotics routes that Mexican drug 
kingpins do to smuggle drugs and people into the United States, reaping money 
to finance its operations and threatening U.S. national security, current and 
former U.S. law enforcement, defense and counterterrorism officials say.

The Iran-backed Lebanese group has long been involved in narcotics and human 
trafficking in South America's tri-border region of Paraguay, Argentina and 
Brazil. Increasingly, however, it is relying on Mexican narcotics syndicates 
that control access to transit routes into the U.S.

Hezbollah relies on "the same criminal weapons smugglers, document traffickers 
and transportation experts as the drug cartels," said Michael Braun, who just 
retired as assistant administrator and chief of operations at the U.S. Drug 
Enforcement Administration (DEA).

"They work together," said Mr. Braun. "They rely on the same shadow 
facilitators. One way or another, they are all connected.

"They'll leverage those relationships to their benefit, to smuggle contraband 
and humans into the U.S.; in fact, they already are [smuggling]."

His comments were confirmed by six U.S. officials, including law enforcement, 
defense and counterterrorism specialists. They spoke on the condition that they 
not be named because of the sensitivity of the topic.

While Hezbollah appears to view the U.S. primarily as a source of cash - and 
there have been no confirmed Hezbollah attacks within the U.S. - the group's 
growing ties with Mexican drug cartels are particularly worrisome at a time 
when a war against and among Mexican narco-traffickers has killed 7,000 people 
in the past year and is destabilizing Mexico along the U.S. border.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was in Mexico on Thursday to discuss 
U.S. aid. Other U.S. Cabinet officials and President Obama are slated to visit 
in the coming weeks.

Hezbollah is based in Lebanon. Since its inception after the Israeli invasion 
of Lebanon in 1982, it has grown into a major political, military and social 
welfare organization serving Lebanon's large Shi'ite Muslim community.

In 2006, it fought a 34-day war against Israel, which remains its primary 
adversary. To finance its operations, it relies in part on funding from a large 
Lebanese Shi'ite Muslim diaspora that stretches from the Middle East to Africa 
and Latin America. Some of the funding comes from criminal enterprises.

Although there have been no confirmed cases of Hezbollah moving terrorists 
across the Mexico border to carry out attacks in the United States, Hezbollah 
members and supporters have entered the country this way.

Last year, Salim Boughader Mucharrafille was sentenced to 60 years in prison by 
Mexican authorities on charges of organized crime and immigrant smuggling. 
Mucharrafille, a Mexican of Lebanese descent, owned a cafe in the city of 
Tijuana, across the border from San Diego. He was arrested in 2002 for 
smuggling 200 people, said to include Hezbollah supporters, into the U.S.

In 2001, Mahmoud Youssef Kourani crossed the border from Mexico in a car and 
traveled to Dearborn, Mich. Kourani was later charged with and convicted of 
providing "material support and resources ... to Hezbollah," according to a 
2003 indictment.

A U.S. official with knowledge of U.S. law enforcement operations in Latin 
America said, "we noted the same trends as Mr. Braun" and that Hezbollah has 
used Mexican transit routes to smuggle contraband and people into the U.S.

Two U.S. law enforcement officers, familiar with counterterrorism operations in 
the U.S. and Latin America, said that "it was no surprise" that Hezbollah 
members have entered the U.S. border through drug cartel transit routes.

"The Mexican cartels have no loyalty to anyone," one of the officials told The 
Washington Times. "They will willingly or unknowingly aid other nefarious 
groups into the U.S. through the routes they control. It has already happened. 
That's why the border is such a serious national security issue."

One U.S. counterterrorism official said that while "there's reason to believe 
that [Hezbollah members] have looked at the southern border to enter the U.S. 
... to date their success has been extremely limited."

However, another U.S. counterterrorism official confirmed that the U.S. is 
watching closely the links between Hezbollah and drug cartels and said it is 
"not a good picture."

A senior U.S. defense official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because 
of ongoing operations in Latin America, warned that al Qaeda also could use 
trafficking routes to infiltrate operatives into the U.S.

"If I have the money to do it - I want to get somebody across the border - 
that's a way to do it," the defense official said. "Especially foot soldiers. 
Somebody who's willing to come and blow themselves up. That's sort of hard to 
do that kind of recruiting, training and development in Kansas City."

Adm. James G. Stavridis, commander of U.S. Southern Command and the nominee to 
head NATO troops as Supreme Allied Commander-Europe, testified before the House 
Armed Services Committee last week that the nexus between illicit drug 
trafficking - "including routes, profits, and corruptive influence" and 
"Islamic radical terrorism" is a growing threat to the U.S.

He noted that in August, "U.S. Southern Command supported a Drug Enforcement 
Administration operation, in coordination with host countries, which targeted a 
Hezbollah-connected drug trafficking organization in the Tri-Border Area."

In October, another interagency operation led to the arrests of several dozen 
people in Colombia associated with a Hezbollah-connected drug trafficking and a 
money-laundering ring. Hezbollah uses these operations to generate millions of 
dollars to finance Hezbollah operations in Lebanon and other areas of the 
world, he said.

"Identifying, monitoring and dismantling the financial, logistical, and 
communication linkages between illicit trafficking groups and terrorist 
sponsors are critical to not only ensuring early indications and warnings of 
potential terrorist attacks directed at the United States and our partners, but 
also in generating a global appreciation and acceptance of this tremendous 
threat to security," he said.

Mr. Braun, who spent 33 years with the DEA and still works with the 
organization as a consultant, said that members of the elite Quds, or 
Jerusalem, force of Iran's Revolutionary Guards also are showing up in Latin 
America.

"Quite frankly, I'm not opposed to the belief that they could be commanding and 
controlling Hezbollah's criminal enterprises from there," Mr. Braun said.

The DEA thinks that 60 percent of terrorist organizations have some ties with 
the illegal narcotics trade, said agency spokesman Garrison Courtney.

South American drug cartels were forced into developing stronger alliances with 
Mexican syndicates when the U.S. closed off access from the Caribbean 15 years 
ago, Mr. Braun said.

Mexico's transit routes now account for more than 90 percent of the cocaine 
entering the U.S., he said. The emphasis on Mexico intensified after the Sept. 
11 attacks, when beefed-up U.S. security measures greatly reduced access to the 
U.S. by air and water, he said.

The shift put Mexico's drug cartels in the lead and helped them amass billions 
of dollars and an estimated 100,000 foot soldiers, according to U.S. defense 
officials.

Hezbollah shifted its trade routes along with the drug cartels, using Lebanese 
Shi'ite expatriates to negotiate contracts with Mexican crime bosses, Mr. Braun 
said.

The World Trade Bridge between Nuevo Laredo and its sister city, Laredo, as 
well as Interstate 35 and Highways 59, 359 and 83, are like veins feeding the 
Mexican syndicates, running from southern Texas to cities across the U.S. and 
as far north as Canada, U.S. officials say. In addition, access routes from El 
Paso, Texas, to San Diego are also high-value entry points.

Ben Conery contributed to this report.




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